• 2007:
John Derbyshire,
Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the Greatest Unsolved Problem in Mathematics (Joseph Henry Press, 2003). Due to a miscommunication, Derbyshire missed the award ceremony. • 2008:
Benjamin Yandell, ''The Honors Class: Hilbert's Problems and Their Solvers'' (AK Peters, 2002). • 2009:
Siobhan Roberts,
King of Infinite Space: Donald Coxeter, the Man Who Saved Geometry (Walker and Company, 2006). • 2010:
David S. Richeson, ''
Euler's Gem: The Polyhedron Formula and the Birth of Topology'' (Princeton University Press, 2008). • 2011:
Timothy Gowers,
The Princeton Companion to Mathematics (Princeton University Press, 2008). This book provides an overview of modern research mathematics; Gowers edited the contributions of 133 distinguished mathematicians as well as writing many of the entries in it himself. • 2012:
Daina Taimiņa,
Crocheting Adventures with Hyperbolic Planes, A. K. Peters 2009 • 2013:
Persi Diaconis,
Ronald Graham,
Magical Mathematics: The Mathematical Ideas that Animate Great Magic Tricks, Princeton University Press 2011 • 2014:
Steven Strogatz,
The Joy of x: A Guided Tour of Math, from One to Infinity, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2012 • 2015:
Edward Frenkel,
Love and Math: The Heart of Hidden Reality, Basic Books, 2013 • 2016:
Jordan Ellenberg,
How Not to Be Wrong: The Power of Mathematical Thinking, Penguin Press, 2014 • 2017:
Ian Stewart,
In Pursuit of the Unknown: 17 Equations That Changed the World, Basic Books, New York, 2012 • 2018:
Matt Parker,
Things to Make and Do in the Fourth Dimension, Farrar, Straus and Giroux (2014) • 2019:
Cathy O'Neil,
Weapons of Math Destruction, Crown, 2016 • 2020:
Tim Chartier,
Math Bytes: Google Bombs, Chocolate-Covered Pi, and Other Cool Bits in Computing, Princeton University Press, 2014 • 2022:
Allison Henrich,
Emille D. Lawrence, Matthew Pons, and David Taylor, eds.,
Living Proof: Stories of Resilience Along the Mathematical Journey, MAA and AMS (2019) ==See also==